The Alpha Masters: Unlocking the Genius of the World's Top Hedge Funds

Summary

The ultimate behind-the-curtain look at the hedge fund industry,unlocking the most valuable stories, secrets, and lessons directly from those who have played the game best.

Written by Maneet Ahuja, the hedge fund industry insider,The Alpha Masters brings the secretive world of hedge funds into the light of day for the first time. As the authority that the biggest names in the business, including John Paulson, David Tepper, and Bill Ackman, go to before breaking major news, Ahuja has access to the innermost workings of the hedge fund industry.For the first time, in Alpha Masters, Ahuja provides both institutional and savvy private investors with tangible, analyticalinsight into the psychology of the trade, the strategies and investment criteria serious money managers use to determine and evaluate their positions, and special guidance on how the reader can replicate this success themselves.

There are few people with access to the inner chambers of the hedge fund industry, and as a result it remains practically uncharted financial territory. Alpha Masters changes all that, shedding light on star fund managers and how exactly they consistently outperform the market. The book:

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Chapter 1

The Global Macro Maven

Ray Dalio

Bridgewater Associates

Above all else, I want you to think for yourself—to decide 1) what you want, 2) what is true and 3) what to do about it. I want you to do that in a clear-headed thoughtful way, so that you get what you want.

—From the introduction to Ray Dalio’s Principles

In his famous Principles, Raymond, or Ray, Dalio tells his employees, You learn so much more from the bad experiences in your life than the good ones. Make sure to take the time to reflect on them. If you don’t, a precious opportunity will have gone to waste. Remember that pain plus reflection equals progress.

This is just one of the many aphorisms, precepts, nuggets of wisdom, and practical management tips that the 62-year-old Dalio—the founder of Bridgewater Associates, the global macro fund that is the world’s largest hedge fund, with $120 billion under management—emphasizes time and time again. Bridgewater advises and runs portfolios for the most powerful pension funds, central banks, and countries around the world. In fact, a recent study by London-based research firm Preqin shows that Bridgewater is the most popular hedge fund among public pensions.

If you did a quick search on Dalio, you’d be flooded with stories of his firm’s success in the markets (including generating its best returns in the most difficult markets of the last decade) and get a fair dose of his philosophy on life and management. For example, Dalio has been practicing transcendental meditation for more than 40 years and calls it the single biggest influence on his life.

You’d also find that his most important maxims involve his relentless pursuit of truth and hunger for personal evolution. His unwavering focus on these goals has no doubt affected his performance figures and client satisfaction for the better, but has earned him mixed reviews from employees, some of whom judge his approach as unnecessarily harsh. Dalio is unapologetic. In his Principles, Dalio proudly says, I have become a ‘hyperrealist.’

Dalio is also well known for how his big-picture, innovative thinking has changed investing in important ways. In fact, industry magazine aiCIO devoted its December 2011 cover story—Is Ray Dalio the Steve Jobs of Investing?—to him, highlighting the similarities between the two leaders’ motivations and approaches and how each has impacted his industry. Dalio, like Jobs, feels his life is a journey during which he must turn his bold visions into reality. Dalio’s industry-changing innovations have earned him two lifetime achievement awards and won Bridgewater dozens of Best of awards.

Dalio says the form of meditation he practices is a combination of relaxation and a very blissful experience. That sounds more like an orgasm than it really is; by blissful I just mean that I just feel really good and relaxed and in good shape. You go into a different mental state—neither conscious nor unconscious. But unlike when you’re sleeping, if a pin drops all of a sudden, it can reverberate through you; it’s shocking.

It took some time for Dalio to discover a meditation technique he could master, but eventually he began to notice that even 20 minutes of meditation could make up for hours of lost sleep. It also began to change the way he was thinking about things: he became more centered and more creative. Meditation put Dalio in a clear-headed state so that when challenges came at him, he could handle them like a Ninja—in a calm, thoughtful way. He says, When you’re centered, your emotions are not hijacking you. You have the ability to think clearly, put things in their right place, and have good perspective.

The Makings of a Maven

Sitting in his modern Westport, Connecticut, office in a blue Bridgewater polo shirt and khakis, Dalio seemed comfortable and at peace. But cultivating a calm mind and demeanor hasn’t dampened his lifelong desire for independent thinking. Growing up the son of a jazz musician and a homemaker, Dalio didn’t like following instructions or remembering what he was taught. Instead, he loved chasing after what he wanted and figuring out for himself how to get it. Because his parents afforded him the freedom to do this, he feels, he received a better-than-normal education, learning more from negative experiences than the positive ones and developing the skills that serve him so well to this day. One of the problems with traditional education, Dalio believes, is that it punishes people for making mistakes rather than teaching them how to use those mistakes to learn and grow.

The idea of someday starting his own firm was the last thing on his mind when a 12-year-old Dalio began caddying to make extra money at the Links Golf Club in Manhasset, New York, near his home. He earned $6 a bag and had some regulars, many of whom were Wall Street investors. It was 1961, and he felt like he heard about stocks everywhere he went. If I got a haircut, the barber would be talking about stocks, he remembers. If I got my shoes shined, the shoeshine guy would be talking about stocks. I didn’t know if I could do it, but it looked very interesting to me. Dalio began combing the Wall Street Journal and started looking for stocks that fit his criteria: they had to cost less than $5, have a name he had heard of, and be available if he wanted to buy more. He landed on Northeast Airlines, a stock that tripled in value shortly after his purchase. I saw all these names in the paper and figured it must be easy because I only have to pick one that goes up. If that didn’t happen and I lost money, says Dalio, I could have easily ended up in another field. The big win with his first stock piqued his interest to continue. So he began reading Fortune magazine, and sending in coupons requesting corporate annual reports. The mailman would lug in all these annual reports and I would spend hours studying them. Studying caused him to ask a lot of questions. And questions lead the way, he says. Learning is through questions, it’s not through being told. Through the 1967–1968 bear market, he taught himself how to sell short and by the time he was in high school, he had already amassed a stock portfolio worth several thousand dollars.

In 1967, Dalio was admitted, just barely, to Long Island University’s C.W. Post Campus in Brookville, New York. Unlike in high school, in college Dalio thrived. He took some finance classes and developed a love of learning. He could finally learn about things that interested him and, for the first time, studied because he enjoyed it, not because he was forced to. He also learned to meditate during his freshman year. Dalio did so well that, after graduating, he gained admission to Harvard Business School. With a more centered, more open state of mind, everything got better. My grades went up. Everything became easier, he says with a smile.

Coming of Age through a Crisis

The summer before starting Harvard Business School in 1971, Dalio clerked on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. During that summer, the Bretton Woods system broke down, and it left an indelible impression on him.

It was one of the most dramatic economic events ever, says Dalio, a very, very big deal and I was at the epicenter of it on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. It thrilled me. Dalio remembers President Nixon making a nationally televised address on a Sunday night. He was spinning political speak, but what he was saying was that the U.S. has defaulted on its debts. And it got me thinking about what money is. What are dollars if they are not tied to gold?

Recognizing that the currency crisis was now driving all other market behaviors, Dalio delved into a study of the currency markets. He began to pay attention to Paul Volcker, now a friend and adviser, then the Treasury Department’s Undersecretary for Monetary Affairs. He began reading all the public statements, then tried to reconcile them with reality. I saw how the government lied or certainly spun things in a certain way. I had all these philosophical questions, like Whom do you believe? What is actually truthfully going on? All of this pulled me into global macro markets. The currency markets would be important to me for the rest of my life.

At business school, Dalio was like a duck in water, as he likes to say. He felt he had climbed to the top of the academic heap and would be learning with the best of the best. Harvard’s case study method excited him because it allowed students to have the freedom to lead with their own thinking. There was very little classic teaching or memorization, techniques Dalio had resisted for so long. Dalio felt, at long last, he had found his ideal environment. Basically, all you were given was the description of the case and a situation. It was up to us to decide what was important. There were no questions, let alone anyone telling you what to do. I always had this desire to talk about what’s true, and here was a process where there was a quality debate and discussion among smart people with different points of view. It was not left-brain learning. It was right-brain learning in the sense that you’re learning through the experience. It was so exciting.

Dalio would eventually take this learning method with him when he formed Bridgewater, where he, above all, encourages the search for truth and excellence.

In 1972, the summer between Dalio’s two years at business school, he decided he wanted to learn more about the world of trading commodities, and he convinced the director of commodities at Merrill Lynch to give him a shot. Because of commodities’ low margin requirements and, at that time, relative obscurity, Dalio figured he was likely to be successful and make money. He was wrong. I hardly made any money, he says, recalling his summer as an assistant at Merrill, but I remember I loved it. And that was great. Even back then, I was never really concerned with money past a certain point of utility. I was happy sleeping on a cot in a studio apartment. All I cared about was having the freedom to do what I wanted to do.

As luck would have it, Dalio’s return to Harvard coincided with a huge surge of inflation. The breakdown of the monetary system in 1971 had caused a surge that pushed commodity prices higher and created the first oil shock in 1973. To combat inflation, the Federal Reserve tightened monetary policy, which brought on what until then was the worst bear market since the Great Depression. All of a sudden, there was a rush into previously unfashionable commodities futures trading, and brokerage houses clamored to build new trading departments. Because Dalio had experience trading commodities, had worked for the commodity division head at Merrill Lynch the previous summer, and had a Harvard MBA, he immediately got a job as the director of commodities at a midsize brokerage and was tasked with setting up the new division. When the brokerage house folded, Dalio moved to Shearson Hayden Stone, the brokerage firm run by Sanford Weill.

At Shearson, Dalio was in charge of the institutional/hedging business, advising clients on how to hedge their business risks. He did not last long. He was fired, he says, shortly after having a drunken argument with his boss on New Year’s Eve in 1974. Dalio decided to strike out on his own. He was 26 years old.

Building Bridgewater

Ringing in 1974 on a positive note, Dalio set up shop in his two-bedroom apartment on East 64th Street in Manhattan on New Year’s Day. He had been trading the markets since he was 12 years old and had planned to continue doing so as he developed his outfit. It seemed the stars had aligned—he already had incorporated the name Bridgewater for an association he had cofounded with some former Harvard Business School classmates. They wanted a generic name that made sense for a physical commodities import business. Though that business didn’t take off, the boring name they chose would last for quite a while.

Dalio was never afraid to dive into unfamiliar territory. I think ego stands in the way of a lot of people doing that. It’s like learning how to ski. . . . The sting of the fall hurts for about a minute but that’s how you learn. So he pored over as many annual reports as he could get his hands on. He didn’t know they contained income statements, balance sheets, or cash flow statements. As he started studying, he began to ask himself a lot of questions. And questions lead the way, he says.

From the start, Dalio never built Bridgewater to draw in investors. Instead, he wanted to focus on managing exposures, writing research, and continuing the pursuit of truth and excellence while he continued to study currency and commodities markets. He remembers being calm and pragmatic about the new venture. I didn’t really feel any anxiety about starting out on my own, says Dalio. I could pay the rent. I had free time to do what I wanted—I liked the independence. And so I thought if it didn’t work out, I’d go get a job. And if it did work out, then I’m home free.

He also thought he had the right personality to handle the pressure. I think anybody who is a great investor, a good investor, a successful investor has to be a person who can be both aggressive and defensive, too. You have to be able to bet. But you also have to have enough fear to have the caution. But you can’t let the fear control you.

Dalio found opportunity in the many large institutions that had exposure in different commodities as well as interest rates and currencies. Currencies, interest rates, and commodities were the things he understood. There were a bunch of institutional clients at Shearson, he says, who wanted to pay me for advice. Commodities were so volatile they needed direction. So he began consulting and managing exposures for corporations and institutional hedgers, and collecting his thoughts and observations in a kind of client letter called Daily Observations. "Because of my derivatives background, I traded commodities, which became various futures, which evolved into swaps and derivatives. I got evolved. I could separate things in a way that was